SLAC and Stanford open one of World’s most advanced facilities for Cryo-EM

Menlo Park, Calif. — A new facility for cryogenic electron microscopy, or cryo-EM, has opened at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. Built and operated in partnership with Stanford University, it's equipped with four state-of-the-art instruments for cryo-EM, a groundbreaking technology whose rapid development over the past few years has given scientists unprecedented views of the inner workings of the cell.

The facility is the first to open as part of the Stanford-SLAC Cryo-EM Initiative, and it is one of the most advanced in the world in terms of the number of high-end instruments and level of expertise it makes available. One of the goals of the cryo-EM initiative is to push the technology even further to get ever more detailed 3-D images of DNA, RNA, proteins, viruses, cells and the tiny biological machines within the cell, revealing how they change shape and interact in complex ways while carrying out life's functions.

The facility allows researchers to prepare samples, collect data at high speed and assess the quality of that data on the fly so they can make the best use of their experimental time. They can carry out experiments in person or remotely.

"This facility is the result of several years of work and planning by faculty and other leaders at SLAC and Stanford, and it's a great example of the opportunities our partnership brings us," said Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne. "Cryo-EM has become an essential tool for research, especially in structural biology, and we're excited that this state-of-the-art facility is finally here."

SLAC Lab Director Chi-Chang Kao said, "This is a tremendous addition to biological science here. It complements a whole suite of tools we already have on the SLAC campus, including two DOE Office of Science user facilities for probing samples with X-rays and an 'electron camera' that does the same with an intense electron beam. Now we will also be able to carry out challenging projects that require cryo-EM, both alone and in combination with other techniques."

The facility will also be an important educational resource, said Stanford Professor Ann Arvin, the university's vice provost and dean of research. "We will have an advanced program for educating the next generation of investigators in using this technology not just in biology but in materials sciences, chemistry and other very basic research areas," she said, "and we're very excited to be able to offer our trainees the opportunity to develop this expertise at the beginning of their careers."

An Unprecedented View of Life's Machinery

Cryo-EM is a version of electron microscopy, which was invented in the 1930s. These microscopes use beams of electrons rather than light to form images of samples. Because the wavelength of an electron is much shorter than the wavelength of light, electron beams reveal much smaller things.

In the mid-1970s, scientists came up with the idea of freezing samples to preserve the natural structure of biological specimens and reduce damage from the electron beam, and cryo-EM was born. The technology slowly evolved, and then a few years ago took a giant leap, thanks to dramatic advances in detectors and software. In 2017 three scientists were awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry for their roles in developing cryo-EM.

Today, cryo-EM generates 3-D images at nearly atomic resolution of viruses, molecules and complex biological machines inside the cell, such as the ribosomes where proteins are synthesized. By flash-freezing these tiny things in their natural environments, scientists can see how they are built and what they do in much more detail than before, stringing thousands of images together to create stop-action movies and even taking virtual "slices" through cells, much like miniature CT scans. Meanwhile, cryo-EM instruments have become easier to use and much more accessible.

"In biology, everything is dynamic, always moving around and changing. Cryo-EM lets you capture snapshots of proteins and other biological nanomachines as they assemble, carry out their work and disassemble again," said SLAC and Stanford Professor Wah Chiu, one of two faculty members hired last year who bring decades of experience in cryo-EM research and technology development.

"A protein may multitask, changing its shape for each of its functions," Chiu said. "From how it looks, you can determine how to modify its shape and consequently its functions – for instance, if you want to block its activity with a vaccine or develop a medication that fits into a particular pocket and triggers a response that fights disease." He added that his own ambition is to be able to look at these biological machines at work while they're still inside the cell, without having to remove or purify them.

Stanford Professor Georgios Skiniotis arrived last year from the University of Michigan. He specializes in studies of complex receptors on the cell's outer membrane that are important targets for drug development, but whose structure and function are still poorly understood. Cryo-EM makes them much easier to study in detail.

"Many refer to it as the cryo-EM revolution, but I view it more as accelerated evolution because most of these concepts and tools have been steadily evolving for many years," Skiniotis said. "Without any sense of exaggeration, the technology offers unprecedented imaging capabilities. Cryo-EM can be used for so many purposes."

In battery research, for instance, scientists working with an older cryo-EM instrument at the Stanford School of Medicine recently captured the first atomic-level images of finger-like growths called dendrites that can pierce the barrier between battery compartments and trigger short circuits or fires.

"With cryo-EM you can look at a material that's fragile, chemically unstable, and you can preserve its pristine state ­­- what it looks like in a real battery – and look at it under high resolution," said Yi Cui, a professor at SLAC and Stanford who led the study. "This is tremendously exciting, a huge opportunity, and it could explode the whole field of materials design."

Technology and the Human Touch

One big advantage of locating the new facility at SLAC is the lab's long history of technology development, including computing and data analysis, said Soichi Wakatsuki, a professor at SLAC and Stanford who leads the lab's Biosciences Division. For example, SLAC staff scientist Anne Sakdinawat will be developing nanofabrication techniques to improve the preparation and study of cellular specimens for cryo-EM studies.

"Adding cryo-EM to our established X-ray approaches will help us build the fundamental understanding that researchers need to design biofuels and biomaterials, predict how carbon cycles through geological and living systems and tease out the complicated interactions of fungi and other organisms in the root zones of plants, which are important for understanding natural ecosystems as well as improving soil fertility," Wakatsuki said.

Another plus is the lab's long tradition of assisting visiting scientists with complicated projects, said Britt Hedman, a SLAC professor and science director for the lab's Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource. "SLAC has done this for 40 years or more," she said. "We provide instrumentation, expertise and training, and we work with them to make sure their experiments are successful. Now we'll be making this legacy of know-how available to the scientists who come to do experiments at the new cryo-EM facility."

Both Chiu and Skiniotis have been collaborating with Stanford scientists on research projects over the years, and that's even easier now that they – and the cryo-EM facility – are close by, Chiu said.

"I think the environment of physicists, engineers, computational scientists and chemists around the SLAC and Stanford campuses can inspire us to think differently," he said. "There's no doubt in my mind that this will lead to new approaches in specimen preparation, data collection, image processing – in the whole pipeline."

Chiu brings with him two National Institutes of Health research programs he started while at Baylor College of Medicine. One is a regional consortium for cryo-EM data collection; it makes instruments available to cryo-EM scientists across the United States who would not otherwise have access to the technology. The other, a national center for 3-D electron microscopy of macromolecules, is focused on cryo-EM technology development that is driven by the biomedical projects of collaborators around the globe, as well as on training and serving the global community of cryo-EM researchers.

The Path to the Stanford-SLAC Cryo-EM Initiative

Roger Kornberg, a Stanford professor and 2006 Nobel laureate in chemistry, has used cryo-EM for many years in research on how the cell carries out instructions in DNA, and has advocated for expansion in this area. Investments from the School of Medicine initiated the drive to expand access to this technology for the Stanford research community, and, along with contributions from the President's office and SLAC, enabled the hiring of Skiniotis and Chiu.

"We were extremely pleased to have received this tremendous support," said William Weis, a professor at SLAC and Stanford. As chair of the Structural Biology Department he played a major part in recruiting the new faculty members, along with Axel Brunger, who chaired the Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology at the time, and Norbert Pelc, then chair of the Bioengineering Department.

"This is a wonderful achievement for the whole interdisciplinary team that has been working diligently to develop this program," Pelc said. "It is also a great opportunity for scientists from SLAC, Stanford and other institutions who will have access to this leading-edge technology. We all will benefit from the discoveries they will make."

Brunger added, "Cryo-EM now enables the study of biomolecules in their native environment, such as in membranes, and ultimately, to study them in their cellular context. Further developments in technology are conceivable and could revolutionize the fields of cell biology and molecular neuroscience."

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Note: This is a text version of the press release. To see the multimedia version of the release, visit https://home.slac.stanford.edu/news/2018/04-30-slac-stanford-open-one-of-worlds-most-advanced-facilities-for-cryo-em/

See photos of the Stanford-SLAC cryo-EM facility on Flickr – https://www.flickr.com/photos/slaclab/sets/72157696279995465

SLAC is a multi-program laboratory exploring frontier questions in photon science, astrophysics, particle physics and accelerator research. Located in Menlo Park, California, SLAC is operated by Stanford University for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science. To learn more, please visit http://www.slac.stanford.edu.

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.